Online colleges make progress in fight against cheating

Colleges and universities have evidence showing that online programs are adopting academic integrity policies and authenticating web-based test takers in large numbers.

Many schools don’t use technology to monitor exam takers.

Cheating in online college classes, long a point of criticism for those skeptical of online education’s legitimacy, is being addressed at more than 75 percent of institutions that have adopted academic integrity policies for those nontraditional courses, according to a report released Dec. 16 by WICHE Cooperative for Educational Technologies.

The report, “Managing Online Education 2013,” is the latest in WICHE’s effort to gauge how institutions are addressing online education’s most pressing issues, such as measuring completion rates, providing support for online faculty and students, and the development of quality course content.

Cheating in online education has become an issue of legislative interest in recent years. The Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 and subsequent rule making included a regulation requiring accrediting agencies to make sure colleges were verifying students’ identity.

The report found that more than three in four colleges had established an academic integrity policy, and four in 10 had used various technologies to authenticate student test takers, ensuring students were who they said they were before and during exams.

Fourteen percent of respondents to the WICHE survey said they had “partially” adopted an anti-cheating policy for online programs, and 7 percent said they had done nothing to address academic integrity.

Using biometrics — technologies that recognize a student’s fingerprint, for instance — cameras, and challenge questions has become more common in recent years, though 36 percent of schools said they didn’t use any form of technology to authenticate exam takers.